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Taking your child to visit a farm or petting zoo can be a great experience for the entire family. A farm visit not only provides children with the opportunity to interact with animals, but children can also learn about how the foods and beverages we eat or drink every day are grown and processed. Children who live on farms receive even more insight into the hard work and effort that it takes to run a farm and produce a tangible product.

But before you load up the family and spend a day in the country, it's important to learn a little bit about farm safety. Animals, heavy machinery, and pesticides are just a few of the hazards for children on farms. And if you live on a farm, it's important to protect your child from everyday dangers by taking safety precautions.

Why Is Farm Safety Important?

The age groups at greatest risk for injury on farms are children around ages 3 to 4 years old and teens 13 to 14 years old. Fortunately, most injuries can be prevented by taking precautions and educating children about the potential dangers.

Dangers on the Farm

If you're visiting a farm or live on one, being aware of potential hazards will help you and your child steer clear of potential accidents.

Machinery

The heavy machinery that enables a farm to be productive and prosperous can also pose a serious risk to children's safety. The most common machinery injuries include being crushed or losing limbs in equipment like combines, threshers, hay processors, and riding mowers. Tractors are the most common and most deadly cause of machinery injuries.

Here are several types of injuries that can be caused by farm machinery:

  • Pinching injuries: When two pieces of machinery move together with at least one piece moving in a circle, a child's clothing or fingers, hands, or other body parts could be caught near a rotating part and severed.
  • Wrapping injuries: If there's a rotating shaft, your child's clothing or hair could be wrapped around the shaft, trapping your child and pulling him or her toward the machinery.
  • Cutting or shearing injuries: Machinery that contains blades or hard edges, such as those found on harvesting equipment, can cut material or skin or even sever limbs.
  • Thrown-object injuries: Machinery such as mowers can throw out stones or other debris while in operation and can injure children.
  • Crushing injuries: Garage doors, tractors, or raised equipment may fall, roll, or be lowered, causing serious injury or death to any child trapped beneath.

Following a few basic rules around machinery can help to keep your child safe.

  • During a visit to a farm, never allow your child to wander from the tour group or away from you. Don't allow your child to play in areas where machinery is in use or being stored.
  • Children, whether they are visitors or residents, should not play with or ride on equipment, even with adult supervision.
  • If there's one seat on the equipment, there should only be one rider - an adult. You should never allow extra riders.
  • Do not allow riders in the back of pickup trucks.
  • All equipment should be parked and locked with keys removed when not in use.
  • Before starting machinery, all operators should know where children are located to avoid accidents - small children could be easily hidden by large wheels or blind spots. Because adults who are operating machinery may be unable to see or hear children, children should never be allowed to play near machinery.
  • Keep hand tools, especially those with sharp or hot parts, out of reach.
  • Keep equipment in good repair and safety features up to date. For example, tractors should have lights, seat belts, and roll-over protection structures (ROPs). When it comes to machinery maintenance, a shield and guard to cover spinning parts or blades should be kept in place. Read and follow the directions in equipment instruction manuals and conduct routine inspections of equipment so you'll be aware of potential safety hazards that may cause an accident.
  • Vehicles such as motorized dirt bikes, mopeds, and all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) are often used as transportation on farms. They can cause death and serious injuries (often head and spinal injuries), mostly among teens who use them recklessly and don't wear helmets. Children under the age of 16 should not operate 2-, 3-, and 4-wheeled vehicles.
  • Finally, teach older kids how to turn off machinery - they might save someone's life in an emergency. If your child is cared for by a family member or other caregiver, make sure that person knows how to turn off machinery in case your child is in danger.

Animals

Visiting the animals on a farm is a great opportunity to teach children to be respectful of farm life. Teach your child not to run, scream, speak loudly, or otherwise startle an animal. Because a mother protecting her young can become defensive, teach your child to not go near baby animals.

Helmets are an important safety feature when riding or working with horses. Another safety concern on a farm is that animals may transmit infections, called zoonoses, to humans. To prevent disease transmission, have your children wash their hands with warm water and soap after touching any animals. If you live on a farm, teach your children to wash their hands after handling or cleaning up after pets and farm animals and to avoid kissing or sharing food with the animals.

Grain and Silos

Grain, which is usually stored in a silo, is often an underestimated danger. Children can become trapped and suffocate under the shifting surface of stored grain or in flowing grain that is being sucked out of the silo. To prevent injuries from grain entrapment, teach your children to never enter a grain storage container or silo and do not allow children to ride in grain wagons. In addition, if a child believes that someone is trapped in a silo, teach your child never to enter to help - instead call an adult or dial 911 or your local emergency number immediately.

Falls From Heights

Children and teens may be enticed by ladders on silos or haylofts. In general, you should keep all ladders, including portable ladders around grain wagons and silos, out of the reach of children. Ladders can also be fitted with special barriers made to prevent children from climbing on them. You should also teach your children that the hayloft is no place to play - a fall from the loft can cause serious and deadly injuries.

Electricity, Pesticides, and Chemicals

Locks and childproof containers are necessary when storing pesticides and chemicals. Because poisons can be ingested, inhaled, or can get into eyes or be absorbed through skin, children should never be allowed near these items. You can take another precautionary step by labeling the containers of poisonous materials with warning signs. Never keep poisonous materials in unmarked bottles - that's a dangerous practice for kids and adults who may get the poisons confused with another substance.

Electrical boxes should be kept locked and there should be no water sources nearby to prevent curious children from being shocked or electrocuted.

Water Safety and Manure

When children explore or play near any body of water, there's always the risk of drowning. Ponds, feeding troughs, or other containers of water may pose a hazard to your child. It's important to watch your child as closely on a farm as you would at a swimming pool or the beach. Supervise your child at all times, and teach your child to avoid water if you're not around to watch him or her. In addition, if you live on a farm, fencing ponds, manure pits, and troughs may help to prevent drownings.

Manure pits are also a special danger on farms. Many farms that produce dairy, beef, and pork products have complicated systems to handle animal waste. When animal manure decomposes, it gives off gases such as hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, and methane - which can be dangerous to adults and children alike. These gases may be colorless and odorless but extremely poisonous. To prevent poisonings, your child should never enter a manure pit or silo (gases can also build up in silos), even if the pit or silo is empty. If you live on a farm, you should strive to reduce the volume of manure in liquid collection pits to reduce gas buildup. You should also take steps to ensure proper ventilation in silos and manure pits.

Noise

Children helping out around the farm could be at risk for hearing loss, too. Using noisy machinery, lawn mowers, and power tools could cause tinnitus, or ringing in the ears, and prolonged exposure can lead to permanent hearing loss. The best way to help your child avoid hearing loss is to wear ear protection such as earmuffs and earplugs when around noisy equipment or animals. Also, discourage your child or teen from listening to headphones or portable stereos while working on the farm. Listening to music may prevent your child or teen from hearing someone's cries of warning or help.

Keeping Your Child Safe

Supervision is the most important step you can take toward protecting your child. Children lack the judgment to understand the dangers that may surround them on a farm. It's important to teach kids farm safety from an early age, and make sure that they recognize warning signs and decals on machinery and poisons.

  • To minimize your child's attraction to areas where dangerous farm work is being performed, carve out a safe play area with ropes or fences away from all hazards. Make this space appealing to your child by placing age-appropriate play items, such as swings, a sandbox, or a playhouse, in the area.
  • Don't keep your child in the dark about off-limits areas on your farm. Try taking a walk around the farm and asking your child to point out areas for play. If your child expresses an interest in an area that's dangerous, explain why the area is dangerous and how your child could get hurt. Point out dangerous areas that are off-limits and other hazards on the farm. Teach your child to observe signs that say "Danger!" and post them in hazardous areas.

Helping Out on the Farm

Farms are often family-run, and each member of the family may have a job to do to contribute to the farm's success. However, you should understand what chores are appropriate for your child's age and development and what the likely risks are. Farm injuries are more likely to occur when a child is performing a task beyond the child's mental, physical, or emotional ability.

How do you know whether your child is old enough to help out with a certain chore? In general, toddlers' tasks should be confined to simple household chores, such as folding towels or helping pick up toys. Older children may be able to perform simple farm chores that don't involve machinery or dangerous substances, if an adult carefully supervises them. Older children and teens may be ready to become involved in groups such as 4-H and Future Farmers of America where they can learn about safety while increasing their responsibilities around the farm.

If your child or teen is old enough and mature enough to help out, make sure that the chore is appropriate to his or her physical and mental abilities.

  • Your child should wear the proper clothing (for example, loose-fitting clothing can get caught in moving machinery) and protective gear like safety goggles, earplugs, work boots, hat, and sunscreen.
  • An adult should always train the child or teen in the proper way to complete the chore or use machinery.
  • If using machinery, your child should understand how to shut off the machine, how it basically functions, and the hazards the machine may present. In addition, remember that your child may tire more readily than an adult, so encourage regular rest breaks.

In general, children under the age of 16 or those who are not licensed to drive a motor vehicle should not be allowed to operate any farm vehicles, including tractors or ATVs. It's also a good idea for licensed teens to take a tractor and farm vehicle safety course before operating farm vehicles. Because the risk for injury is so great, it's important to be consistent with consequences if your child doesn't follow safety rules. You should also protect your child from injury by being safety conscious yourself - if your child sees you following your own safety rules on a daily basis, the child will be more likely to understand and respond to your concerns about safety.

Have a Safety Plan

Seconds count in any accident, so a safety plan is imperative for minimizing injury and getting an injured person help. If your child is missing, check all dangerous areas first. Make sure your child knows how and when to call 911, other local emergency numbers, and poison control center if someone is injured, and post those numbers near each phone in the house and on the farm. Family members should always be aware of each other's whereabouts and when they are due to return to prevent delays in getting help in the event of an emergency. Another important precaution - have everyone in the family learn CPR and first aid.

Updated and reviewed by: Steven Dowshen, MD
Date reviewed: March 2005
Originally reviewed by: Waldemar Storm, MD





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